On Wednesday night, Catherine Herridge, the chief intelligence correspondent for Fox News, pointed out an apparent admission by Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin that the White House was aware of Clinton’s private server.

Herridge explained that President Barack Obama’s Blackberry is a high-security device and that every email that comes through must be pre-approved.

Abedin told FBI agents that she had to inform the White House each time Clinton changed her email address so that the new address could be approved for the president’s phone.

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“So this is another admission that the White House understood that she [Clinton] was using this private server for government business and that the president was OK with it, and his team was OK with it because they were allowing updates to the email to be made,” Herridge said. “So he’s got a real horse in the race here, and he’s not speaking as a dispassionate observer to what’s happened.”

This is not the first instance of Obama being caught in a seeming lie in regards to his knowledge of Clinton’s private email server.

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In March of 2015, Obama told the American people that he had no prior knowledge of Clinton’s private email server before news hit, saying he learned about it at the “same time everybody else learned it through news reports.”

But, according to the Podesta emails released by WikiLeaks, this may not be true. FBI email releases have confirmed that the president corresponded with Clinton in at least 18 exchanges and that he used a pseudonym.

A subpoena from the House Oversight Committee spurred discussion among Team Clinton about how to respond. Podesta suggested invoking “executive privilege,” but the phrase was deemed suggestive of Watergate-style obstruction.

Instead, the State Department announced that the Obama–Clinton emails were being withheld from the court-ordered Freedom of Information Act production of Clinton’s emails in order “to protect the President’s ability to receive unvarnished advice and counsel.”

The State Department then cited the Presidential Records Act, which effectively suppresses Obama’s correspondence for between five and twelve years after he leaves office.

According to Herridge, between the Clinton campaign emails regarding Obama’s knowledge of Clinton’s private email server and Abedin’s recent testimony, Obama has not only some questions to answer but a serious interest in the investigation.

“I think the point that’s been missing in this discussion is that President Obama, with all due respect, really has a horse in this race and a vested interest in the outcome,” Herridge said.